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Transcription & Gene Expression

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Presentation on theme: "Transcription & Gene Expression"— Presentation transcript:

1 Transcription & Gene Expression
Topic 2.6 & 7.2

2 Understandings: Transcription is the synthesis of mRNA copied from the DNA base sequences by RNA polymerase. Gene expression is regulated by proteins that bind to specific base sequences in DNA. The environment of a cell and of an organism has an impact on gene expression. Nucleosomes help to regulate transcription in eukaryotes. Transcription occurs in a 5’ to 3’ direction. Eukaryotic cells modify mRNA after transcription. Splicing of mRNA increases the number of different proteins an organism can produce. Application & Skills: The promoter as an example of non-coding DNA with a function. Analysis of changes in DNA methylation patterns.

3 Getting together!!! DNA is in the nucleus.
Ribosome is in the cytoplasm. We need them together to make proteins. How do we get them together? RNA!!!!

4 Central Dogma First proposed – Crick (1956) DNA  RNA  Protein
First arrow: Transcription Second arrow: Translation

5 Transcription: DNA  RNA
In replication, DNA helicase is used to unzip DNA. In transcription, RNA polymerase is used to separate the two DNA strands. RNA polymerase will join with the region called the “promoter” region.

6 Promoter: (non-coding sequence) responsible for the initiation of transcription.
Coding Sequence: Region of DNA that is transcribed by RNA polymerase Terminator: RNA polymerase will continue to transcribe until it reaches this point.

7 Which strand do we copy?? They are complementary, meaning not exactly the same. Codons: three nucleotides; codes for proteins or start and stop regions. So, complementary will code for different proteins.

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9 Antisense vs Sense Each strand is complementary to the other, so there is a difference in the code of the strands. Codon  amino acids  proteins Antisense strand (template strand) is the strand that is transcribed into RNA. Complementary to the RNA sequence Sense strand (coding strand) is the strand that is not transcribed into RNA. The complementary strand to antisense will be the same as the sense strand.

10 RNA polymerase is what “unzips” the genes, not helicase
TATA box

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12 Nucleoside triphosphates pair to complementary base pair, the releasing of phosphates provides energy. This release of energy causes polymerization (binding a.a. tgether) of mRNA. This process is referred to as elongation.

13 Overview of Transcription
The process of transcription can be divided into three main steps: initiation, elongation and termination. In initiation, RNA polymerase binds to the promoter and causes the unwinding and separation of DNA strands. Elongation occurs as the RNA polymerase moves along the coding sequence, synthesis RNA in a 5’ to 3’ direction. Termination, when RNA polymerase reaches the terminator, both the enzyme and the newly synthesized RNA strand detach and the DNA rewinds.

14 See how mRNA is the same as the strand it is not copying??
Which is the sense strand and which is the antisense?

15 Post Transcription Modification
Capping Addition of a methyl group to the 5’ end Protects against degradation by exonucleases Polyadenylation Addition of a poly-A tail to the 3’ end Improves the stability of the RNA transcript and facilitates its export from the nucleus. Splicing Introns are removed Exons are fused together

16 Post-transcription Modification
5’ cap: Made of a modified guanine nucleotide with three phosphates. Poly-A tail: composed of Adenine nucleotides Both protect the mature mRNA from degradation in the cytoplasm.

17 Alterative Splicing Alternative Splicing - different pieces may be introns at different times, and exons may be rearranged - means 1 gene can code for more than one protein

18 Gene Expression Inactive DNA is highly methylated compared to DNA that is being transcribed. A methyl group is an organic functional group (CH3). Ex. X chromosome in mammalian females. The inactive X chromosome is heavily methylated and are not usually transcribed or expressed. Once methylated it will stay this way even through cell division.

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20 Control Elements The DNA sequence that regulatory proteins bind to are called control elements Some control elements are located close to the promoter while others are more distant. Regulatory proteins typically bind to distal control elements, whereas transcription factors usually bind to promoter elements. Most genes have multiple control elements and hence gene expression is a tightly controlled and coordinated process.

21 Environment Himalayan rabbit produces different fur pigment on the temperature Humans produce different amounts of melanin Some fish, reptile and amphibians can change gender.


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